The publisher's summary:
At 36, Katie Cope isn’t where she thought she’d be. Somehow the things she was supposed to have slipped by. Her dream of being a journalist was reduced to writing pop culture pieces. Her dream of being a mother stalled in a faltering marriage. And when her husband sells his business, reaching success she never has, she feels more pressed than ever to make something of her life.When she discovers a disturbing connection between a wealthy housing project in the Colorado mountains and missing girls, she knows she might have a chance at a big story. But after joining the community, what she sees in her neighbor’s windows and the strange footsteps in the snow that come out of the woods and linger at her backdoor have her wondering if the success is worth her safety.Something is fatally wrong in the mountains of Carson’s Pass, and when she realizes her own past might have everything to do with the vanished girls, she must risk going missing herself to find out what.
This story is a slow burn. In fact, I was rather bored until page 70 when Katie finds a secret room behind a wall. The developer had a reputation for building secret tunnels behind the walls of homes that he built. 2 girls had gone missing years earlier from houses that he constructed. Katie and her best friend Miranda came to Carson’s Pass to determine whether the homes in this development had secret tunnels. They planned in taking photos of these spaces and sending them to a journalist friend back in San Diego. While in the secret room Katie found a box filled with photos of young girls. She was shocked to discover a picture of her friend Claire, who it was assumed killed herself in the Colorado mountains.
This story was so eerie it could have been written by Alfred Hitchcock. Toward the end I felt like I was in the Twilight Zone when what was real became unreal. I had goosebumps. Aside from the initial chapters the book was perfectly plotted. The pace was fast but at the end it was racing to the finish line. It was very rewarding. This author is well known for his psychological thrillers but The Quiet Wife may be one of his best.
The characters were well drawn. The story is told from Katie's perspective. She is somewhat estranged from her family. Katie wants to avoid her prevocative sister but finds herself inviting her sister to family events. The relationship with her husband was hard to decipher. Both of them wanted to reconcile but not really. They thought it would be the right thing to do but their hearts are not in it. Katie is obviously the "quiet wife" but she has started to express her feelings more. No one cares though. Secondary character Phillip Pope, the developer of Carson’s Pass, is the primary villain of the book. There has been alot of gossip about him for years because of the missing girls. Some went missing from houses that he built in Colorado and no can figure out how anyone could have taken them.
I cannot say enough good things about the book but because the opening was slow I am rating it 4 out of 5 stars.

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